In antri  's collection                        
                    La Poliziotta
                            Original Cover
                                                    
                                    
                                    
                                                1986
                    
                
            
                                    Watercolor
                
                
            
            
            25 x 36 cm (9.84 x 14.17 in.)
                                                    
                            Added on 11/3/24
                        
                    
            
                                            Link copied to clipboard!                                        
                                        
                                    


Description
                                Emanuele Taglietti is an Italian illustrator and painter, mostly known for his covers for digest-sized, adult comics whose themes were sex, violence, and horror.
He painted more than 500 covers for such books as La Poliziotta, Zora the Vampire and Sukia, among others.
Original cover by Emanuele Taglietti
Super Poliziotta #9 - "Il playboy di Marsyville"
Edifumetto, February 1986
The story "Il playboy di Marsyville" was first published in first series La Poliziotta #8, and then reprinted in Super Poliziotta #9, the second series dedicated to the character and published from 1985 (a third and final series was published from 1989).
                        He painted more than 500 covers for such books as La Poliziotta, Zora the Vampire and Sukia, among others.
Original cover by Emanuele Taglietti
Super Poliziotta #9 - "Il playboy di Marsyville"
Edifumetto, February 1986
The story "Il playboy di Marsyville" was first published in first series La Poliziotta #8, and then reprinted in Super Poliziotta #9, the second series dedicated to the character and published from 1985 (a third and final series was published from 1989).
                            4 comments
                        
                     
                    
                    
                                            
                    
                    
                        
                            To leave a comment on that piece, please log in
                                                        
                    
                About Emanuele Taglietti
Emanuele Taglietti was born in 1943 in Ferrara, of the region of Emilia-Romagna, Italy. His father, Otello, was a painter and a decorator. In the 1960s, Otello Taglietti worked as a set designer on movies made by his cousin, acclaimed director Michelangelo Antonioni, often taking Emanuele with him on the set.
After attending a local art school, Emanuele Taglietti studied design at the Experimental Centre of Cinematography, in Rome. He worked as a decorator and an assistant director for around thirty movies, including Federico Fellini's Juliet of the Spirits, Dino Risi's Dirty Weekend, and others.
By the early 1970s, the popularity in Italy of the digest-sized fumetti comics, whose themes were mostly sex, violence, and horror, was at its peak.[2] Taglietti moved on to work as an illustrator for Edifumetto, the biggest publisher of fumetti in Italy.
At the time, Taglietti would often paint more than ten covers every month for Renzo Barbieri's publishing house. By the end of the 1980s, the comics' popularity started to weaken, and Taglietti left Edifumetto to work as an oil painter, as well as an evening-class teacher in decoration and the conservation of murals. In 2000, he retired from teaching, continuing to work as murals and watercolor painter.
                                 
                     
                            ![Mafioso #29 [La vois des armes] couverture Mafioso #29 [La vois des armes] couverture](/planches/200H/2024/299/taglietti-mafioso-29-la-vois-des-armes-couverture-37fo.jpg) 
                                             
                                             
                                            